Language expressions Australia

January 6, 2009 on 3:59 am | By | In bluefreesky.com | Language expressions Australia
  • Origin of the phrase "happy as Larry'.


  • A detailed explanation about the phrase is available here http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Phrases_and_Sayings/Question2434.html


  • The following Web Site may help http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-lar1.htm Kind regards Ross (Australia)


  • Hi arthurd, H W Orsman, editor of the Oxford Dictionary of New Zealand English, has traced the earliest appearance of this slang term in 1875 to a New Zealand writer named G L Meredith: http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-lar1.htm The saying is said to have originated in Australia or New Zealand and refers to Australian Boxer, Larry Foley (1847-1917). The Answer Bank Who was Larry, and why was he happy? http://www.theanswerbank.co.uk/Phrases_and_Sayings/Question2434.html Other sources dispute the Larry Foley connection, and link the saying with the word larrikin: "Far more likely is the suggestion that it comes from an English dialect word *larrie* meaning to joke. A possible link with Australia and New Zealand is the word *larrikin* a street rowdy or young urban hooligan, recorded in both those countries from the 1860s. The word may well have come from the English dialect *larrikin* for a mischievous youth, once common in Worcestershire and Warwickshire and closely related to *larrie*." from: http://users.tinyonline.co.uk/gswithenbank/sayingsh.htm However you look at it though, it appears that Larry was very happy. Hope that helps! * j *







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